The hashtag #DeleteUber was trending through much of the weekend on Facebook and Twitter after many accused the ride-hailing company of profiting in the wake of President Donald Trump’s immigration ban.

The New York Taxi Workers Alliance called for a halt on rides to JFK to protest the fact that citizens from seven predominantly Muslim countries were being detained at the airport. During the taxi strike, Uber lifted its surge pricing and continued to drive passengers to the airport.

Roger Stone, an advisor to Trump, praised the company for breaking the strike:

.@Uber stepping up in a big way for American people during the manufactured outrage against @POTUS. Unions don’t dictate the rules anymore.

The pro-Trump narrative was compounded by a statement to employees made by the company’s chief executive, Travis Kalanick.

The statement said that the company would “partner with anyone in the world as long they’re about making transportation in cities better,” and explicitly encompassed the Trump administration. Kalanick serves as part of a Trump business advisory group, the President’s Strategic and Policy Forum.

“We’ve taken the view that in order to serve cities you need to give their citizens a voice, a seat at the table,” Kalanick said after receiving backlash.